Dorstenia is part of the tribe Dorstenieae of the family Moraceae, and all three levels of classification are
monophyletic from chloroplast and nuclear DNA phylogenies, with morphological characters that also support. The family Moraceae is a part of the monophyletic order
Rosales, and within this order Moraceae is most closely related to the plant families
Ulmaceae,
Cannabaceae, and
Urticaceae. '' from South India and Sri Lanka
Evolution Fossils of
Ficus and
Morus fruits have been found on the African continent, and are used to approximate the origin of the family
Moraceae to a maximum of 135 million years ago. In a recent study using fossil fruits, Bayesian molecular dating, and maximum likelihood, researchers attempted to reconstruct the ancestral history of
Dorstenia with ITS (
internal transcribed spacer) sequences from ribosomal DNA of 35
Dorstenia species and seven out-group species from the different tribes within the Moraceae. The goal was to resolve a long-standing issue regarding
Dorstenia; whether this genus diverged and radiated prior to the split of Africa and South America about 105 mya, and members of this genus are on separate continents by
vicariance, or if this genus diverged post-split and
Dorstenia became established in the Neotropics by seed dispersal. This study produced a phylogeny indicating an initial Old World divergence around 112.3 mya, divergence and radiance of New World
Dorstenia at 67.2 and 30.3 mya respectively, and an Old World group nested within the New World that radiated around 13.6 mya. The results of this phylogeny do not reveal whether vicariance or seed dispersal explains the biogeography; however, due to the small endosperm that is typical of
Dorstenia seeds, it is unlikely that seed dispersal by animals is the reason for the New World and reemerged Old World species. The pattern seen does suggest several hypotheses regarding how the New World lineage came about as well as how three Old World
Dorstenia species are nested in the New World clade. It is theorized that the New World lineage crossed over via Asia and then
Beringia, established populations all throughout the North and South Americas, and when climate conditions changed (and North America was no longer tropical or subtropical), that the North American populations died out, leaving only those in South America. This idea also theoretically allows for Old World species nested within the New World lineage, with
Dorstenia populations established in America returning to Africa via Beringia while climatic conditions were still favorable. For this hypothesis to receive more credence, fossil
Dorstenia plants in North America would be needed. ==Distribution and habitat==